Stimulus programs just refloat economy

By Doyle McManus

Los Angeles Times

Published: Sunday, Dec. 28 2008 12:12 a.m. MST

The economic crisis has given Barack Obama an unexpected gift: spending money. The president-elect is drafting a stimulus plan that will reach $775 billion or more, enough to fund almost every project he mentioned during the campaign. But like many gifts, this one comes with dangers.

All across the nation, politicians and policy wonks are happily making lists of what they hope to find under a post-Christmas stimulus tree. State governors have asked for $136 billion for construction projects they have declared — in Washington's favorite new term — "shovel ready." Mayors have chimed in with $97 billion of worthy ideas, from sewer repairs in Milwaukee to a beach parking lot in Ventura, Calif. University presidents, mass-transit proponents and national park advocates all have their hands out. Obama, too, has talked about using the stimulus package to help pay for his favorite priorities — not only for traditional infrastructure projects such as roads and bridges but for promoting alternative energy, modernizing schools, improving health care, even expanding access to the Internet.

The danger is not just the obvious hazard of running up a deficit that becomes a burden after the economy recovers; Obama has promised to be vigilant on that score. The more subtle problem is that as stimulus spending grows, it could become less focused — and less effective.

For a stimulus plan to be effective, the money must get into the economy fast. One of the defects of this year's income tax rebate was that it took months to reach taxpayers, and when it did, relatively few spent the money on consumer goods. (Instead, many used it to reduce debt — wise for them, but not as good for the economy.)

A virtue of infrastructure spending is that it creates both jobs and public benefit in the form of better roads, or sewers, or schools or beach parking. But will it be fast enough? That depends on how many of those shovel-ready projects are really ready to go and how many are just gleams in a governor's eye.

The stakes are high, and they're not only economic. If Obama can fashion a stimulus plan that works, he'll be claiming a huge political prize. A generation of voters reared on Ronald Reagan's dictum that government is the problem will instead see the federal government acting as a solution — just when they needed one most.

If he fails, he'll reinforce citizens' skepticism of the government's ability to solve problems — skepticism that has often made them mistrust Democratic proposals that smacked of big government.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS